Submitted by PepsiMangoMmm t3_yzw1ia in askscience
Everything I've learned about neuroscience so far has made this statement not really make sense. What about the synapse is actually changing?
Submitted by PepsiMangoMmm t3_yzw1ia in askscience
Everything I've learned about neuroscience so far has made this statement not really make sense. What about the synapse is actually changing?
chazwomaq t1_ix3p0cs wrote
Here are some properties which can change at the synapse:
The sensitivity of the post-synaptic membrane, making it require more or less input to respond with an action potential at the axon.
The amount and type of receptors present in the post-synaptic membrane.
Production of neurotransmitters in the pre-synaptic terminal.
The branching of axons in the pre-synaptic membrane e.g. after nerve damage you can get axonal sprouting of one axon into a now vacant section of dendrites.
The precise physical basis of memory is still largely unknown.